Jason McCarthey has worked in Philadelphia restaurants
for 20 years. He tells of having waited tables despite colds, fevers, even a
broken foot.
"We don't get paid if we call in sick, so we go to
work, no matter how terrible we feel," McCarthey said of restaurant
workers at a City Council hearing Tuesday.
Council's Committee on Public Health and Human Services
voted unanimously to advance a mandatory paid sick-leave bill after hearing
from advocates such as McCarthey, and members of the business and hospitality
industry seeking amendments.
The bill is scheduled to be heard Thursday by the full
Council and will likely come up for a final vote Feb. 12.
This is the third time Councilman William K. Greenlee has
introduced such a bill. When he started the push in 2008, Philadelphia was one
of the first cities to consider such a measure. Now, 16 cities and three states
have similar laws, and President Obama is calling on Congress to pass federal
legislation requiring paid sick time.
Though Greenlee's bill was twice vetoed by Mayor Nutter,
in 2011 and 2013, the proposal has the mayor's support this time. Nutter, who
created a task force to study the issue and draft recommendations, has said he
will sign the latest version if it gets to his desk.
"Third time's a charm," Greenlee told reporters
before Tuesday's hearing. "I think, as we've seen around the country, paid
sick leave has worked very well, has not had the problems people have
predicted. . . . It's fair to everybody, and it's long past due in
Philadelphia."
Greenlee says the bill would help many of the 200,000
Philadelphians, or about 40 percent of the city's workforce, who do not get
paid sick leave, according to federal labor statistics.
Under his proposal, businesses would be required to offer
one hour of paid sick leave for every 40 hours an employee works - about five
days a year.
The latest version of his bill would apply to any
business with 10 or more employees.
The Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday asked to have the
employee threshold raised to 15. Initially the chamber wanted 50.
"We all support a healthy workplace
environment," said Joe Grace, the chamber's director of public policy.
"The issue is one of competitiveness - when the City of Philadelphia
imposes mandates that other neighboring municipalities do not impose, it puts
us at a disadvantage."
Greenlee has refused to consider a lower threshold, given
how many people it affects. According to the task force's study, nearly 13
percent of Philadelphia employers have between 10 and 19 employees. Earlier
bills set the threshold at five.
Pushback also came Tuesday from hotel and restaurant
industry representatives, who asked for amendments requiring employees to take
sick leave in blocks of least four hours.
Ed Grose, executive director of the Greater Philadelphia
Hotel Association, said workers who take off only one or two hours at a time
create problems in trying to find people to fill in for such a short stretch.
The bill would have a big effect on the hospitality
industry - about 78 percent of food service and accommodation workers in
Philadelphia don't get paid sick leave, according to Greenlee's proposal.
About 50 supporters of the bill attended the hearing,
some holding signs that read, "Do You Want My Cold?", and, "City
Council Members, You Get Sick Days." Some booed opposition testimony
during the hearing.
Fatima Hasan, who owns a child-care center in the
Overbrook Farms section, testified that she often has parents bring in sick
children because they cannot afford to miss work to stay home with them.
Virginia Simmons, 63, a Southwest Philadelphia resident
who is disabled and uses a motorized chair, testified that she wanted the bill
passed so that the nursing aides who help her every day can stay healthy.
"I'm surprised there aren't more people in
wheelchairs here, because we're affected by this," she said. "They
are our legs, our eyes, our hearing."
Marianne Bellesorte, vice president of policy and
communications for PathWays PA, which helps disadvantaged young mothers find
housing, worked closely with Greenlee on the bill.
She also has a personal connection. While fighting
stage-four breast cancer, she said, she was scared every time she went out
about whom she would come in contact with - given her diminished immune system.
"I had to worry about the clerk at the drugstore, the servers at the
restaurants. . . . Not one of them would have wanted to get me sick," she
said.
Under the bill, employees could use accrued paid sick
time to deal with their own illnesses or those of family members, or to seek
counseling or legal or other support in dealing with domestic violence or
sexual assault.
Employees who would not be covered include independent
contractors, seasonal workers, adjunct professors, employees hired for fewer
than six months, interns, government employees, and workers covered by
collective-bargaining agreements.
Businesses that already provide sick leave on par with or
exceeding the bill's requirements would not have to change their policies.
Employers that violate the ordinance would be subject to fines, penalties, and
restitution.
If the bill becomes law, it could run afoul of the
Republican-controlled Assembly.
Two state senators, John Eichelberger (R., Blair) and
Lisa Boscola (R., Lehigh), have responded to Council's consideration of paid
sick leave with a promise to introduce legislation in Harrisburg prohibiting
local ordinances.
According to the senators, 12 states have passed similar
preemptive mandates.
Asked whether he would veto such a preemptive bill, Gov.
Wolf, a Democrat, was noncommittal. His spokesman, Jeff Sheridan, issued a
statement saying, "Hundreds of thousands of Pennsylvania workers do not
have paid sick time - it affects productivity and it negatively impacts
economic growth."
Source: Philly.com
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